• Film critic-turned-filmmaker Karan Anshuman shows flashes of wit and potential in his occasionally clever nods to classic films. But saddled with a script that’s neither funny nor biting enough, he delivers a film that barely takes off.

  • Shubhra Gupta
    Shubhra Gupta
    Indian Express

    3

    The film finds its laughs in the odd moment, but comes off, over all, flat and tepid.

  • Hiten Trivedi
    Hiten Trivedi
    BollywoodJournalist

    2

    Stay away from this one and don’t even think of spending a penny of your hard earned money on Bangistan. Instead, go to Pakistan or Afghanistan!!!

  • Kusumita Das
    Kusumita Das
    Deccan Chronicle

    2

    Bangistan stands on ground zero. In T.S. Eliot’s famous words, the film begins and ends ‘not with a bang, but with a whimper’.

  • Bangistan is eventually reduced to being a satire on the notion of a satire, falling tremendously short of a bang for your buck.

  • It careens out of control before you can say bang and hurtles scratchily down a path that hits a dead-end all too quickly. Stay out of the way.

    If you really desire to visit Krakow, pack your bags and spare yourself a Bangistan detour.

  • Sarita Tanwar
    Sarita Tanwar
    DNA India

    4

    For a comedy film, ‘Bangistan’ has very little humour. You go into see a light, funny film but you soon realise this one is too preachy and predictable to achieve that.

  • Suhani Singh
    Suhani Singh
    India Today

    3

    Good intent doesn’t translate into a good movie. As Pravin and Hafeez engage in religious discourse, they get a better understanding of their own religion. But these scenes are so contrived that they irk more than enlighten. By the time the wannabe terrorists have a change of heart and head and turn peace activists, the audience is exasperated with the events.

  • I would advise not really spending on this ticket over the weekend, but if you have to, best to step inside the theatre in some sort of intoxication. Else, watch it at your own risk.

  • BANGISTAN is a pointless film that fails to make you laugh or entertain. Skip it.

  • Sachin Chatte
    Sachin Chatte
    The Navhind Times

    4

    Like many countless other films, Bangistan also has a promising plot somewhere in there but it never realizes it potential. It has a tough time finding its footing as it oscillates between comedy and some serious sermonizing and the two have to be handled with great care like a chef mixing ingredients to make a dish.

  • I’m trying to figure out things in my mind, to make sense of what I have just seen…

  • Johnson Thomas
    Johnson Thomas
    The Free Press Journal

    4

    Karan Anshuman had impressed many with his critiquing skills but the same cannot be said about his directorial or scripting ones. The script gets decrepit in the middle section. And the climactic one delivered in sermonizing fashion just doesn’t cut any ice. The blundering terrorists angle was a great ploy but to have them intentionally turn in the slog overs, appeared too far-fetched. Also the subplot that involves a goat that Pravin is forced to adopt, doesn’t go anywhere near fruitful.

  • Rhea Srivastava
    Rhea Srivastava
    Magna Mags

    3

    However, as one doesn’t probably expect from a film critic-turned-director (assuming it would be a priority in this case to make a good film minus the obvious flaws he points out every friday), this one is two hours of puerile ‘torture.’

  • Shishir Gautam
    Shishir Gautam
    NowRunning

    3

    Karan and his team fail to create a screenplay that engages. They did have a grand idea. Karan fails to transform that into a convicting film. And oh the climax… so avoidable! Tragedy!

  • Sreeju Sudhakaran
    Sreeju Sudhakaran
    Bollywood Life

    3

    No two ways about it. Bangistan is a huge disappointment, especially since it came from the stable of Farhan Akhtar and Ritesh Sidhwani. As for the director, we recommend you to watch the 2010 British film Four Lions, to understand how to make a farce film on terrorism that entertains as well!

  • Bangistan made me realise the connection between satire and preachiness. Almost all satire has a “holier-than-thou” air about it that the parent-humor sarcasm carries. It is in a way talking down to its target audience. Except, that audience isn’t even listening or will see through both the sarcasm and the lesson.

  • A fine fine concept has been butchered in one swift stroke. Bangistan tries hard to give you those much-anticipated giggles. It ends up making a lot of noise but audiences don’t walk into the theatre to hear a bang. ‘Sound’ direction and less hamming could have saved this venture from turning into a cinematic disaster.

  • Karan Anshuman biggest failing lies in the climax when Bangistan deliberately turns preachy.

    The movie in itself was a message, you don’t have to give sermons to educate the audience.

  • Bangistan is not a great film and surely can be missed during this weekend but if you are a Riteish Deshmukh fan, then you can manage to sit for 2 hours in the theater and bare this bad film with a great performance by Riteish.

  • The biggest pitfall of the movie is Riteish’s character who feels so strongly about Muslims being stereotyped by the society that he turns into a suicide bomber. It is extremely bizarre. This film is a plain victim of bad direction and avoids everything (read Riteish) that could’ve saved him. This film is a victim of shabby direction. If Karan needs a lesson in films of this genre he must grab a copy of Four Lions which was pertinent and entertaining. Bangistan is low on bangs, fun and everything it promised it will entail.

  • …while it’s a fact that there is nothing very special about the film, we give it 2 stars only for Riteish Deshmukh’s versatile acting and the appropriate editing by Shweta Venkat. Watch it only if you haven’t yet seen a film with a social message or if you have nothing better to do this weekend.